The present invention relates to a cassette for a recording medium, comprising an upper casing and a lower casing, a spool for holding a roll of recording medium and disposed the upper and lower casings, and a side casing for enclosing the spool and joining the upper and lower casings, wherein the side casing is fitted to at least one of the upper and lower casings by means of press fit or snap-fit connections. Various embodiments of cassettes and printers are also disclosed.
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6. An ink ribbon cassette comprising: a supply spool for holding a roll of ink ribbon; a take-up spool onto which ink ribbon unwound from the supply spool is wound; a driveable sprocket arranged to rotate the supply spool about an axis of the supply spool for rewinding unwound ribbon onto the supply spool; and a spring disposed to act on the sprocket in the direction of said axis for maintaining tension of the ink ribbon between the supply and take-up spools.
5. A cassette for use with a printer, the cassette comprising a body having a base portion, a top portion, and a side portion extending from the base portion to the top portion, the body housing a roll of print receiving medium having an axis of rotation extending in a first direction from the base portion to the top portion, said cassette comprising one or more ribs on an outside surface of the side portion of the cassette, at least one of the ribs being substantially channel-shaped, wherein at least one of the legs of the channel-shape is disposed at an angle of greater than 90 degree to a rib forming a base of the channel-shape.
7. An ink ribbon cassette comprising: a hollow supply spool for holding a roll of ink ribbon; and a driveable sprocket at least part of which is disposed inside the supply spool to rotate the supply spool for rewinding unwound ribbon onto the supply spool, wherein the end of the sprocket that is not disposed inside the supply spool comprises an inner cylinder and an outer cylinder, the inner cylinder extending further in an axial direction away from the supply spool than the outer cylinder so as to bear against a biasing element of the ink ribbon cassette, wherein the outer cylinder comprises a bearing surface for bearing the driveable sprocket against a surface of the cassette.
1. A cassette for a recording medium comprising a casing, said casing comprising upper and lower casings and a side casing for joining the upper and lower casings, and said casing comprising a substantially central through-hole passing through said upper and lower casings, wherein one region of at least one of the upper and lower casings comprises on its exterior surface first and second ribs running in parallel and extending across a width of said at least one of the upper and lower casings either side of said central through-hole, which ribs are adapted to slide in a groove of a device in which the cassette can be inserted, each of the ribs comprising a projection that projects from said rib, said projection being elongate in a direction of said rib, said projection adapted to latch into a detent of a device in which the cassette can be inserted.
2. A cassette comprising a hollow spool for holding a recording medium, said cassette further comprising a sprocket disposed inside at least a part of the spool and driveable to rotate the spool for unwinding recording medium therefrom, wherein a surface of the sprocket in contact with an interior surface of the spool comprises a plurality of protrusions which bear on the inside surface of the spool to provide an interference fit the spool, said cassette comprising an upper casing and a lower casing, said spool for holding a roll of recording medium being disposed between the upper and lower casings, and a side casing for enclosing the spool and joining the upper and lower casings, wherein the side casing is fitted to at least one of the upper and lower casings by press-fit or snap-fit connections, wherein the upper and lower casings and the spool each have a substantially central through-hole which are substantially aligned as between the parts; said sprocket being disposed in the through hole of one of the upper and lower casings and dimensioned to extend into the through hole in the spool for rotating the spool.
3. A cassette according to
4. A cassette according to
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This is the U.S. National Stage of PCT/EP2003/014990, filed Dec. 23, 2003, which in turn claims priority to European Patent Application No. 0230199.2, 0230200.8, and 0230196.8, all filed Dec. 24, 2002, all four of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
The present invention relates to a printing device and a cassette or cartridge, and also to a combination of a printing device and such a cassette or cartridge.
One type of printing device that is widely known is a thermal tape printer. A thermal tape printer generally comprises a printing means comprising a thermally activatable printhead for printing onto an image receiving tape. Typically, the image receiving tape has an upper layer for receiving an image and a removable liner layer or backing layer secured to the upper layer by a layer of adhesive, such that after an image has been printed the liner layer or backing layer can be removed and the image receiving tape can be stuck down in the form of a label. Such thermal printers often include cutters for cutting off a length of image receiving tape after the image has been printed. Such thermal printers operate with a consumable in the form of image receiving tape, or any other image receiving substrate such as heat shrink tube, magnetic, iron-on labels, plastic strips, etc. The term “consumable” is used herein to denote any appropriate form of providing image receiving tape. The image receiving tape may comprise a continuous backing sheet whilst the image receiving layer has been pre-cut into labels, such that a label can be printed and then peeled off from the backing sheet. A printer intended to operate with such an image receiving tape does not need a cutter to cut the image receiving tape.
A number of forms of consumables are known in the art, including cassettes or cartridges which comprise a housing in which is located a supply of image receiving tape. Cassettes are generally usable once only, such that once the image receiving tape has been consumed, the cassette (including the housing) is thrown away.
A cassette can have a housing which substantially encloses the supply of image receiving tape or the housing can be simpler, for example a spool and two sides within which the tape is located. A simpler cassette is sometimes called an image receiving holder.
Another type of consumable is a roll of tape without a permanent holder, for example wound on a paper core. These are termed “supplies”.
In thermal printers, an image is generally generated by activation of a thermal printhead against an ink ribbon, such that ink from the ink ribbon is transferred onto the image receiving tape at a print zone. So-called direct thermal tapes are also available, in which an image is created directly onto the direct thermal tape without the interposition of an ink ribbon. If an ink ribbon is used in a thermal printer, it is generally provided held in a cassette having a housing, the housing being insertable into the printer. The ink ribbon is passed out of the cassette into overlap with the image receiving tape such that both the ink ribbon and the image receiving tape are fed past the printhead. Each length of ink ribbon is used for only one printing operation and is then rewound back into the ink ribbon cassette. The ink ribbon is therefore also a consumable.
Known tape printing apparatus of the type with which the present invention is concerned are disclosed in EP-A-322918 and EP-A-322919 (Brother Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha) and EP-A-267890 (Varitronic). The printers each include a printing device having a cassette receiving bay for receiving a cassette or tape holder. In EP-A-267890, the tape holder houses an ink ribbon and a substrate tape, the latter comprising an upper image receiving layer secured to a backing layer by an adhesive. In EP-A-322918 and EP-A-322919, the tape holding case houses an ink ribbon, a transparent image receiving tape and a double sided adhesive tape which is secured at one of its adhesive coated sides to the image tape after printing and which has a backing layer peelable from its other adhesive coated side. With both these apparatus, the image transfer medium (ink ribbon) and the image receiving tape (substrate) are in the same cartridge.
It has also been proposed by the present applicants in, for example, EP-A-578372 to house the ink ribbon and the substrate tape in separate cassettes or cartridges.
In all of these cases, the image receiving tape passes in overlap with the ink ribbon to a print zone consisting of a fixed print head and a platen against which the print head can be pressed to cause an image to transfer from the ink ribbon to the image receiving tape. There are many ways of doing this, including dry lettering or dry film impression, but the most usual way currently is by thermal printing where the print head is heated and the heat causes ink from the ink ribbon to be transferred to the image receiving tape.
The devices of the type described above are provided with a keyboard which enables a user to enter characters, symbols and the like to form an image to be printed by the tape printer. The keyboard usually has text character keys and number keys for entering letters and number keys respectively, plus some function keys which, among other things, operate menus and allow printing attributes to be set.
Cassettes are usually made from plastics material and for practical purposes are often formed from more than one moulded part. One problem with such cassettes is that they can be costly to manufacture because each moulded part is relatively complex in order to achieve correct placement and unwinding of the image receiving medium, and the parts need to be fitted together by a manufacturing process e.g. welding. It would be desirable to provide a cassette made from parts which can be press-fit or snap-fit together.
Another problem with such cassettes is that excessive unwinding of the tape from the cassette can occur, and this is undesirable. This can happen during transportation of the cassette, but can also occur during operation of the printer when the tape is being driven. It would be desirable to provide a cassette with means for preventing excessive unwinding of the tape.
During use of a cassette, image receiving tape contained therein must be unwound and must exit the cassette in order to be printed on. It is vital that the tape is properly aligned in the correct position relative to the printhead and, if used, the ink ribbon. Although this may be in part achieved by guiding elements within the printer, these may not be able to achieve accurate alignment if the tape is not correctly aligned when it arrives at the guiding elements. One problem with existing cassettes is that it is possible for the image receiving tape to move laterally during unwinding and exit from the cassette, and if enough lateral movement is accumulated over the unwinding and exit path, the image is not printed centrally on the tape or, in the worst case, does not even fit on the tape due to being printed in the wrong position or due to folds in the tape. It would therefore be desirable to provide a cassette which has means for ensuring correct alignment of exiting image receiving tape.
A printer of the type previously described is often useable with different widths of tape. This enables the creation of many different sizes of labels. It is usual to size a cassette housing to correspond to the width of the tape contained in the cassette, thereby giving a visual indication of the tape size and avoiding use of unnecessarily bulky cassette housings. Having a suitably sized casing may also make it easier for tape to exit the cassette correctly aligned, depending on the design of the cassette and printer. One problem associated with the provision of multiple cassettes is the manufacturing cost for making the various designs. It would be desirable to mitigate these costs.
As well has having different cassettes of different tape width available, it is also common to provide various cassettes of different colours and styles of tape. Another consequence of having different cassettes available for use with a printer is that a user or multiple users will want to use different cassettes but not use all the tape on one cassette at once. Therefore, one cassette will be removed by a user and another inserted. A problem associated with this is wastage of tape. This occurs because after creation of a label, a certain amount of further tape has exited from the cassette and is in the region between the cassette and the printer tape exit. It would be desirable to rewind this further tape prior to removal of a cassette so that it is available for use the next time the cassette is inserted into the printer.
In order to achieve successful printing the image receiving cassette must be held firmly in place in the printer and must be inserted in the correct location. If the cassette can move about within the printer or is incorrectly positioned during insertion, images will not be correctly printed on the tape, or malfunction of the printer could be caused. It would therefore be desirable to provide means for ensuring accurate alignment and positioning of a cassette in a printer and means for retaining the cassette in the correct position after insertion.
Most printers include a drive means which rotates a supply spool of a tape cassette, thus feeding tape to the printing area. It may be desirable to provide a further means of locally feeding the tape in the printing area.
Another requirement for successful printing is that the ink ribbon cassette is correctly inserted in the printer and is retained in the correct location. If the ribbon cassette can move about within the printer it may result in incorrect feeding of the ink ribbon and hence a lack of proper transfer of ink to the image receiving tape during printing. It would therefore be desirable to facilitate correct insertion of the ink ribbon cassette and to ensure retention of the ink ribbon cassette in the correct position in the printer.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a cassette for a recording medium, comprising an upper casing and a lower casing, a spool for holding a roll of recording medium and disposed between the upper and lower casings, and a side casing for enclosing the spool and joining the upper and lower casings, wherein the side casing is fitted to at least one of the upper and lower casings by means of press-fit or snap-fit connections.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a cassette for a recording medium comprising an exit region for recording medium, and first and second flanges disposed at the exit region, each flange comprising one or more grooves adapted to receive an edge of a recording medium and allow the said edge to pass along the grooves.
According to a third aspect of the present invention, there is provided a cassette for a recording medium comprising a casing, wherein one region of the casing has a rib on its exterior surface, which rib is adapted to slide in a groove of a device in which the cassette can be inserted, the rib comprising a projection adapted to latch into a detent of a device in which the cassette can be inserted.
According to a fourth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a printing device having a recording medium receiving bay adapted to receive a recording medium cassette, wherein the receiving bay comprises a groove along which a rib of a recording medium cassette can be slid during insertion of the cassette into the recording medium receiving bay, the groove comprising a detent into which a projection of a rib of a recording medium cassette can be latched.
According to a fifth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a printing device having a recording medium receiving bay adapted to receive a recording medium cassette, the receiving bay comprising first and second supports mounted in a moveably resiliently manner, the printing device further comprising a mechanism which is operable to allow separation of the supports for insertion of a recording medium cassette therebetween and is further operable to allow movement of the supports towards one another to retain an inserted recording medium cassette in a substantially fixed position with respect to the recording medium receiving bay.
According to a sixth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a cassette adapted to be received in a printing device, the cassette comprising one of a ramp means and a resiliently moveable portion capable of interacting with the other of a ramp means and a resiliently moveable portion of a printing device, such that during insertion of the cassette the ramp means causes movement of the resiliently moveable portion from a position in which it would otherwise prevent insertion of the cassette into a position allowing insertion of the cassette.
According to a seventh aspect of the present invention, there is provided in combination a printing device and a cassette adapted to be received in the printing device, the printing device comprising a resiliently moveable portion capable of interacting with a ramp means of a cassette, such that during insertion of the cassette the ramp means causes movement of the resiliently moveable portion from a position in which it would otherwise prevent insertion of the cassette into a position allowing insertion of the cassette.
According to an eighth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a cassette comprising a hollow spool for holding a recording medium, and a sprocket disposed inside at least a part of the spool and driveable to rotate the spool for unwinding recording medium therefrom, wherein a surface of the sprocket in contact with an interior surface of the spool comprises a plurality of protrusions which bear on the inside surface of the spool.
According to a ninth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a printer comprising a cassette receiving bay for receiving a cassette holding recording medium, the cassette receiving bay comprising a sprung portion which is openable to allow insertion of a cassette in the receiving bay and which is arranged to, following insertion of a cassette, close under a spring force, thereby locking an inserted cassette in the receiving bay.
According to a tenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a cassette for use with a printer, the cassette comprising one or more ribs on an outside surface of the cassette, at least one of the ribs being substantially channel-shaped, wherein at least one of the legs of the channel-shape is disposed at an angle of greater than 90° to the base of the channel-shape.
According to an eleventh aspect of the present invention, there is provided a in combination a printer and a cassette, the printer comprising a cassette receiving bay for receiving the cassette, the cassette receiving bay comprising a fixed portion and a sprung portion which is openable to allow insertion of the cassette in the receiving bay and which is arranged to, following insertion of the cassette, close under a spring force, thereby locking the inserted cassette in the receiving bay, wherein when the sprung portion is open, the sprung portion and the fixed portion together form one or more grooves through which a corresponding one or more ribs of the cassette can slide during insertion, thereby retaining the sprung portion in an open position during insertion.
According to a twelfth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a recording medium cassette comprising a casing and having a wound roll of recording medium disposed in the casing which roll can unwind such that an end of the recording medium can exit the casing, wherein the cassette further comprises a leaf spring disposed on the casing and oriented to act on the recording medium to exert a force in a direction towards the centre of the roll of recording medium.
According to a thirteenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a set of cassettes for holding a recording medium, each cassette comprising an upper portion and a lower portion disposed apart a distance and joined together by attachment to a side portion having a width corresponding to the distance, thereby enabling a roll of recording medium to be held between the upper and lower portions with the width of the recording medium being oriented substantially parallel to the width of the side portion, wherein each cassette has a side portion of a different width.
According to a fourteenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a printer for use with a cassette holding recording medium, the printer comprising: driving means able to drive in a forward direction to unwind recording medium of a cassette inserted in the printer and to drive in a reverse direction for rewinding recording medium; detection means for detecting that an inserted cassette is to be removed from the printer and, when such a detection is made, generating a signal indicating that a cassette is to be removed, wherein the driving means is arranged to receive the generated signal and in response thereto, drive in the reverse direction for rewinding a length of recording medium of an inserted cassette.
According to a fifteenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a printer for use with a cassette holding recording medium, the printer comprising: a printing zone comprising a platen and a print means arranged to receive therebetween recording medium held in a cassette inserted in the printer, to thereby print an image on a length of the recording medium, the platen being rotatable to drive a length of recording medium through the printing zone; and driving means comprising a feed roller arranged to rotate to thereby unwind recording medium held in an inserted cassette to thereby feed recording medium to the printing zone, wherein the printer is arranged to, when a length of recording medium unwound by the driving means reaches the printing zone, rotate the platen to drive the length of recording medium through the printing zone.
According to a sixteenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a printer comprising: a cassette receiving bay for receiving a cassette holding recording medium; a roller drive means disposed in a region in which recording medium exits a cassette inserted in the cassette receiving bay; and a lever means operable to move the roller drive means from a position in which a cassette can be inserted to a position in which it will contact recording medium as the recording medium exits an inserted cassette.
According to a seventeenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided an ink ribbon cassette comprising: a supply spool for holding a roll of ink ribbon; a take-up spool onto which ink ribbon unwound from the supply spool is wound; a driveable sprocket arranged to rotate the supply spool for rewinding unwound ribbon onto the supply spool; and a spring disposed to act axially on the sprocket for maintaining tension of the ink ribbon between the supply and take-up spools.
According to an eighteenth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a an ink ribbon cassette comprising: a hollow supply spool for holding a roll of ink ribbon; and a driveable sprocket at least part of which is disposed inside the supply spool to rotate the supply spool for rewinding unwound ribbon onto the supply spool, wherein the end of the sprocket that is not disposed inside the supply spool comprises an inner cylinder and an outer cylinder, the inner cylinder extending further in a direction away from the supply spool than the outer cylinder.
Other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, the accompanying drawings, and the appended claims.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
In the figures, like reference numerals indicate like parts.
The mechanical arrangement of the printing apparatus will now be described with reference to
The first receiving part 66 is shown in
As discussed in the next paragraph, the user slideably inserts the cassette 6 so that the ribs 58 cooperate with one of the supports 86,88, while the opposing support moves in parallel. The opposing support has a sprocket 85 which is inserted into a sprocket 68 of the supply spool 62.
The supports 86, 88 are adjustable to accommodate different width cassettes as will now be explained, also with reference to
The above described ribs and grooves, and the support system can be used either together or separately to ensure good location and retention of the cassette 6 in the printer.
The printing apparatus comprises a gear chain 12, powered by a motor 10, which drives a feed roller 14 which causes the tape from the tape cassette 6 to move towards a print zone 3 of the printing apparatus. At the print zone, a print head 16 is biased against a platen roller 18 by a spring 20. The spring 20 is held within a print head mounting block 19.
As shown in
Rewinding of the tape 2 onto the supply spool 62 can only be done when the printhead is in an open condition, away from the platen roller. The printhead can be opened either manually or automatically.
An ink ribbon cassette 8 (shown in
The ink ribbon cassette 8 is located in the printing apparatus so that the ink ribbon 4 has a path which extends through the print zone 3, and in particular extends in overlap with the tape 2 between the printhead 16 and the platen 18. The platen 18 is driven by a platen motor 56, to drive the tape through the print zone.
A cutting apparatus 40 is located downstream of the print zone 3. The cutting apparatus comprises a circular cutting blade or cutting wheel 44 mounted on a cutter holder 54. The cutting blade 44 cuts the tape 2 against an anvil 52. A cutter motor 42 drives the cutting wheel 44 from a rest position across the width of the tape. Once the cutting wheel 44 has traversed the entire width of the tape, the cutter motor 42 is reversed and drives the cutter holder 54 back to its rest position. The cutter holder 54 is slidably mounted on two sliders 46 which span the entire width of the tape 2. The cutter holder 54 is attached to a belt 48 which is supported by two rollers 50. One of the rollers 50 is driven by the cutter motor 42 to cause the cutter holder to move along the sliders 46.
The mechanical function of the printing apparatus will now be described. During printing, the tape feed motor 10 and the ink ribbon motor 34 are activated to drive the tape 2 and the ink ribbon 4 respectively past the printhead 16 at an equal speed. Once the tape reaches the print zone, it is picked up by the platen 18, driven by the platen motor 56. In this embodiment the microprocessor 100 runs a timer which commences driving of the platen motor 56 a predetermined time after the motor 10 has begun to feed the tape. In other embodiments an end-of-tape detector is provided to detect when the leading edge of the tape 4 has been driven to the print zone 3. In both cases, driving of the platen motor 56 commences shortly before the leading edge of the tape actually reaches the platen 18 but it could be arranged to commence exactly as the leading edge reaches the platen. When the platen 18 starts to rotate, driving of the motor 10 is stopped so as not to feed excess tape to the print zone 3.
An image is transferred onto the image receiving tape 2 by virtue of activation (heating) of particular printhead elements to transfer ink from the ink ribbon 4 to the substrate 2 in a known manner. Images are printed on a column by column basis as the tape 2 is moved past the printhead 16. This printing technique is known per se and so is not described further herein.
When the printing on a label is finished, the tape feed motor 10 and the ink ribbon motor 34 continue to feed the tape and the ink ribbon a predetermined distance until the end of the label is at the required cutting position. The tape may then be cut by the cutting apparatus 40. If die-cut labels are used, a label can be peeled off at this position. Once cutting is complete, the tape 2 is reversed by reversing the platen motor 56 that drives the platen 18 in reverse until the tape 2 is in the correct position for printing the next label. Whilst the tape 2 is reversed, the ink ribbon 4 is also reversed at approximately the same speed by driving the ink ribbon motor 34 in reverse. This prevents the ink ribbon 4 rubbing against the tape 2 and becoming damaged.
A photo-sensor 76 shown in
Various details of the tape cassette 6, an alternative tape cassette 100 and the ink ribbon cassette 8 will now be described.
Reference is firstly made to
(i) The spool 62 is placed in the centre of a roll of tape 2. In this embodiment the tape 2 is formed of a backing layer together with an upper layer which is to be printed, the upper layer being pre-cut into a series of labels. A continuous upper layer which can be cut with the cutting apparatus 40 is used in other embodiments.
(ii) A profile 66 or side portion of the cassette 6 is press-fit into one of the portions 60. The profile 66 forms the side of the tape cassette 6, the portions 60 forming the front and rear or upper and lower parts of the case. The profile 66 is generally of open-ended cylindrical form but does not form a complete cylinder. When the tape cassette 6 is assembled, the absent part of the cylinder is located in the region where the tape exits the cassette 6. The profile 66 has four posts 63 formed on the inner surface of the profile 66 and running across the “length” of the part-cylinder of which the profile 66 is formed i.e. across the width of the profile 66. Each post 63 has a rounded protrusion 63a at each end which is for press-fitting into a corresponding groove 60a cut out of the outer edge of each portion 60. Thus the profile 66 is fitted into one of the portions 60, which in this embodiment we will call the rear portion. More or less than four protrusions and grooves could be used. The positions of the protrusions 63a and the corresponding positions of the grooves 60a ensure that the profile 66 is correctly fitted to the portion 60, such that the absent part of the cylinder from which the profile 66 is formed aligns with an exit area of the tape cassette 6. The exit area of the portions 60 is shown by the presence of a flange 59, which will be described in steps (iii) and (iv) below.
(iii) The tape 2 on the spool 62 is placed into the joined profile 66 and rear portion 60. The end of the tape 2 is placed in the flange 59.
(iv) The other portion, front portion 60 is press-fit to the free edge of the profile 66. The grooves 60a of the front portion are not visible in
(v) The front and rear portions 60, although generally circular in shape, contain a central hole or cut-out portion 60b. A sprocket 68 is pushed into the hole 60b in the front portion 60 to form a press-fit in the spool 62, and a plug 70 is pushed into the hole 60b in the rear portion 60 to form a press-fit in the other end of the spool 62. The sprocket 68 has an inner cylindrical portion 68a with formations that can be picked up to drive the sprocket 68 and hence the spool 62 to rewind tape 2 onto the spool 62 during reverse feeding. The plug 70 also has an inner cylindrical portion 70a. The inner cylindrical portions of the sprocket 68 and the plug 70 are sized to be able to rotate in the holes 60b in the portions 60. The sprocket 68 and the plug 70 both have circular flanges 68b, 70b extending from the inner cylindrical portions 68a, 70a which fit inside curved ribs 60c on the portions 60. Only the ribs 60c on the front portion 60 are visible in
(vi) The leaf springs 64 are assembled onto the front and rear portions 60. This part of the procedure is shown more clearly in
Two further features of the tape cassette 6 can be seen in
It should be noted that once the cassette 6 is assembled, the two flanges 59 form a sleeve for the tape 2 which holds the tape 2 on either edge. It can further be seen that the flanges 59 are disposed symmetrically across the width of the tape cassette 6 (i.e. along the “length” of the cylindrical form of the profile 66) and that therefore as a result of running through the grooves 61 the tape 2 is centred as it exits the tape cassette 60. This is an important feature because if the tape 2 were to exit the cassette off-centre, this deviation might not be correctable in the printer and hence the tape 2 would arrive at the printhead 16 off-centre, resulting in poor printing quality.
It has been mentioned above with respect to the mechanism shown in
Referring now to
The ribs 94 bear on the inside surface of the spool 62, thus providing the advantage of preventing loosening of the spool 62 on the sprocket 68 and the plug 70. This prevents unwanted movement of the tape 2 away from its roll. Another advantage is that the tolerance on the spool diameter is less critical which reduces manufacturing and quality control costs. The particular configuration of the protrusions is not critical, as long as there is an interference fit between the protrusions and the inside surface of the spool 62. However, the serrated nature of the ribs 94 assists in preventing loosening of the spool 62 on the sprocket 68.
A second embodiment of a cassette and printer will now be described. The features of the tape cassette which differ from those of the cassette 6 will be highlighted and the different insertion method of the cassette will also be explained. Thus the second printer is similar to the previously-described printer but differs in the cassette receiving bay.
A cassette of the second embodiment is shown in
One difference between the cassette 100 and the cassette 6 is the shape of the tape exit region of the cassette. In the cassette 100 the flanges 59′ are differently shaped from the flanges 59 of the cassette 6 such that the underside of the flanges 59′ forms a more pronounced recess 102 with the main body of the cassette 100. This recess is for receiving an idler roller 104 of the printer which the emerging tape moves against, as shown in
Another difference between the cassette 100 and the cassette 6 is in the design of the profile 66′. The profile 66′ is better shown in
Insertion of the cassette 100 in the printer will now be described with reference to
The cassette receiving bay 110 is shown in
The locking ring 114 includes an exit slit for the tape 2 so that the tape 2 can exit the cassette receiving bay past the idler roller 104. This can be best seen in
In
The cassette receiving bay 110 has a door (not shown) which is closed after insertion of a cassette 100 to cover the otherwise exposed top surface of the cassette. Closing the door moves the idler roller 104 into its working position in contact with tape 2 exiting the cassette 100.
In other embodiments, a separate lever is used to rotate the idler roller 104 into position. It is also possible for closure of the locking portion 114 to move the idler roller partially or fully into position. If it were only moved partially, a lever or the door could be used to complete the movement.
Further discussion of the ink ribbon cassette 8 will now be made, firstly with reference to
The ink ribbon cassette 8 is constructed generally from a bottom part 120 and a cover part 122. Each of these parts comprises two half-cylinders joined together, so that when the parts 120, 122 are joined together, two cylinders are formed, one to house the supply reel 24 and the other to house the take-up reel 28. The supply reel 24 comprises a supply spool 124 and the take-up reel 28 comprises a take-up spool 126. The two half-cylinders of the cover part 122 are joined towards the widest part of the half-cylinders i.e. towards the bottom in
Other features of the ink ribbon cassette 8 that can be seen in
The action of the rewind brakes 154 can be better understood with reference to
An anti-turn rib 164 runs along much of the length of the sprocket 132 and can be picked up by a corresponding recess on the interior of the spool 124 for positive engagement with the spool for rewinding the ink ribbon 4.
The other two cylinders, an outer cylinder 158 and an inner cylinder 160, form the end of the sprocket 132. The inner cylinder 160 sits inside the outer cylinder 158 but extends further out in the direction of the spring 140. This is to maintain a constant contact with the spring 140. The outer cylinder is used as a bearing surface onto the interior of the bottom portion 120 for the sprocket 132.
Reference is now made once again to
In order to remove the cassette 8 from the printer, the centre portion 171 is pushed inwards, and the springs 168 then release the cassette 8.
It can be understood that the ramp and button mechanism would work equally well in reverse, i.e. with the printer bearing the ramp and slot and the cassette bearing the button.
Reference is now made to
Although in the above embodiments the example of a tape as a recording medium has been used, the invention and the described embodiments would work equally well with other types of recording medium, for example die-cut labels.
The applicant draws attention to the fact that the present invention may include any feature or combination of features disclosed herein either implicitly or explicitly or any generalisation thereof, without limitation to the scope of any of the present claims. In view of the foregoing description it will be evident to a person skilled in the art that various modifications may be made within the scope of the invention.
The foregoing detailed description has been provided solely to illustrate the structural and functional principles of the present invention, and is not intended to be limiting. To the contrary the present invention is intended to encompass all modifications, alterations, substitutions and equivalents within the spirit and scope of the following claims.
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